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You are so lucky!
Be prepared to be amazed at how easy this hive is to use. There are lots of different ways to use it too. Don't be influenced by all the negativity you will hear. Embrace the freedom it gives you.
 
Talk on Friday at the local bee group about it.

Bloke says the supers don't sit properly and allow capillary action water to get into hive, rot the lugs and run down the insides.
His conclusion was going back to his nationals.

A lady at our bee chat group is after something that reduces the lifting - something like a dartington that she could build herself might suit maybe.
 
I have one, happy to answer any questions you have.
 
Plenty of advice in the 'beetainer' section. My advice is to read it and discount most of the hype. Dartingtons are the better option, for many reasons.
 
Talk on Friday at the local bee group about it.

Bloke says the supers don't sit properly and allow capillary action water to get into hive, rot the lugs and run down the insides.
His conclusion was going back to his nationals.

A lady at our bee chat group is after something that reduces the lifting - something like a dartington that she could build herself might suit maybe.

If the supers don't sit properly...you can get the flexible plastic bathroom tape and fix along the sides....and the supers will sit on top of it. One of mine had this problem...it was secondhand..but it was easily solved.
 
Plenty of advice in the 'beetainer' section. My advice is to read it and discount most of the hype. Dartingtons are the better option, for many reasons.

I have two wooden Dartingtons but I find they are no better in some ways than a national. The wooden parts are heavy and there are no handholds to grip the top covers easily. The roof needs a man to lift it. All the working of the frames is fine though. Insulating the Dartington requires some forethought as it can only be added on the outside.
I can lift the roof off a Beehaus easily, the top covers lift off without breaking your fingernails. Supers have good handholds. Or you can dispense with the supers and just expand sideways. You can insulate the sides of the Beehaus by taking the liners out and putting in sheep wool roofing insulation. You can cut a piece of the sheeps wool to fit above the top covers too.
 
Nothing there that has not been covered (probably by me) previously. Without mods, the original beetainers were rank, designed by amateurs (other than Robin Dartington).

Dartingtons are better than Nationals in some respects. It is always a compromise! Horses for courses!

Top covers are easily removed and lifted - they are 18mm thick and a simple rectangle. What is difficult with that? The roof can be made in two parts for wimps and others who are 'strength challenged' for a variety of reasons.

Supers on a Dartington can be Nationals. Far better than those silly half supers, for several reasons.

Better to use any insulation sealed in plastic bags in the side mouldings of the beetainer. Geuss who suggested that years ago! I designed my roofs so that expanded polystyrene sheet was simply used as extra insulation. Top covers on a beetainer need internal insulation, anyway. Carp design. External winter insulation is easy enough on a Dartington

Dartingtons don't have a well around the entrance/exit. A poor design for the beetainer. Dartingtons don't even suggest the hive is for two colonies - a stupid claim made by omlette, IMO.

One important point is that Dartingtons can be easily made from plans supplied by RD. Far more cost effective than the ludicrously expensive price of an omlette beetainer.

Any more reasons required, to demonstrate the superiority of the timber Dartington?
 
If the supers don't sit properly...you can get the flexible plastic bathroom tape and fix along the sides....and the supers will sit on top of it. One of mine had this problem...it was secondhand..but it was easily solved.

Someone suggested this to him at the meeting but he'd given it back to whoever lent it him I think.
 
Can’t answer for Minxpinx, but I have never really used mine. The Dartingtons were (and still are) a far better hive. One of my Dartingtons is currently in use. But not so many 14 x12s are occupied either.
 
Nothing there that has not been covered (probably by me) previously. Without mods, the original beetainers were rank, designed by amateurs (other than Robin Dartington).


What is a ‘beetainer’, please? Another name for an Omlet Beehaus?
 

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